[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index]

[tor-dev] Proposal xxx: Consensus Hash Chaining



Here's a proposal Nick Mathewson and I just wrote for ticket #11157.

--- Begin proposal body ---
Filename: xxx-consensus-hash-chaining.txt
Title: Consensus Hash Chaining
Author: Nick Mathewson, Andrea Shepard
Created: 06-Jan-2015
Status: Draft

1. Introduction and overview

To avoid some categories of attacks against directory authorities and their
keys, it would be handy to have an explicit hash chain in consensuses.

2. Directory authority operation

We add the following field to votes and consensuses:

        previous-consensus ISOTIME [SP HashName "=" Base16]* NL

where HashName is any keyword.

This field may occur any number of times.

The date in a previous-consensus line in a vote is the valid-after date of
the consensus the line refers to.  The hash should be computed over the
signed portion of the consensus document. A directory authority should
include a previous-consensus line for a consensus using all hashes it supports
for all consensuses it knows which are still valid, together with the two
most recently expired ones.

When this proposal is implemented, a new consensus method should be allocated
for adding previous-consensus lines to the consensus.

A previous-consensus line is included in the consensus if and only if a line
with that date was listed by more than half of the authorities whose votes
are under consideration.  A hash is included in that line if the hash was
listed by more than half of the authorities whose votes are under
consideration.  Hashes are sorted lexically with a line by hashname; dates
are sorted in temporal order.

If, when computing a consensus, the authorities find that any
previous-consensus line is *incompatible* with another, they must issue a
loud warning.  Two lines are incompatible if they have the same ISOTIME, but
different values for the the same HashName.

The hash "sha256" is mandatory.

3. Client and cache operation

All parties receiving consensus documents should validate previous-consensus
lines, and complain loudly if a hash fails to match.

When a party receives a consensus document, it SHOULD check all
previous-consensus lines against any previous consensuses it has retained,
and if a hash fails to match it SHOULD warn loudly in the log mentioning the
specific hashes and valid-after times in question, and store both the new
consensus containing the mismatching hashes and the old consensus being
checked for later analysis.  An option SHOULD be provided to disable
operation as a client or as a hidden service if this occurs.

All relying parties SHOULD by default retain all valid consensuses they
download plus two; but see "Security considerations" below.

If a hash is not mismatched, the relying party may nonetheless be unable to
validate the chain: either because there is a gap in the chain itself, or
because the relying party does not have any of the consensuses that the latest
consensus mentions.  If this happens, the relying party should log a warning
stating the specific cause, the hashes and valid-after time of both the
consensus containing the unverifiable previous-consensus line and the hashes
and valid-after time of the line for each such line, and retain a copy of
the consensus document in question.  A relying party MAY provide an option
to disable operation as a client or hidden service in this event, but due to
the risk that breaks in the chain may occur accidentally, such an option
SHOULD be disabled by default if provided.

If a relying party starts up and finds only very old consensuses such that
no previous-consensus lines can be verified, it should log a notice of the
gap along the lines of "consensus (date, hash) is quite new.  Can't chain back
to old consensus (date, hash)".  If it has no old consensuses at all, it
should log an info-level message of the form "we got consensus (date, hash).
We haven't got any older consensuses, so we won't do any hash chain
verification"

4. Security Considerations:

 * Retaining consensus documents on clients might leak information about when
   the client was active if a disk is later stolen or the client compromised.
   This should be documented somewhere and an option to disable (but thereby
   also disable verifying previous-consensus hashes) should be provided.

 * Clients MAY offer the option to retain previous consensuses in memory only
   to allow for validation without the potential disk leak.
--- End proposal body ---

-- 
Andrea Shepard
<andrea@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
PGP fingerprint (ECC): BDF5 F867 8A52 4E4A BECF  DE79 A4FF BC34 F01D D536
PGP fingerprint (RSA): 3611 95A4 0740 ED1B 7EA5  DF7E 4191 13D9 D0CF BDA5

Attachment: pgpaIde_DYuNu.pgp
Description: PGP signature

_______________________________________________
tor-dev mailing list
tor-dev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-dev